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Dive into the research topics where Melanie J. Bennett is active.

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Featured researches published by Melanie J. Bennett.


Cell | 1998

Crystal Structure of the Hemochromatosis Protein HFE and Characterization of Its Interaction with Transferrin Receptor

José A. Lebrón; Melanie J. Bennett; Daniel E. Vaughn; Arthur J. Chirino; Peter M. Snow; Gabriel A. Mintier; John N. Feder; Pamela J. Bjorkman

HFE is an MHC-related protein that is mutated in the iron-overload disease hereditary hemochromatosis. HFE binds to transferrin receptor (TfR) and reduces its affinity for iron-loaded transferrin, implicating HFE in iron metabolism. The 2.6 A crystal structure of HFE reveals the locations of hemochromatosis mutations and a patch of histidines that could be involved in pH-dependent interactions. We also demonstrate that soluble TfR and HFE bind tightly at the basic pH of the cell surface, but not at the acidic pH of intracellular vesicles. TfR:HFE stoichiometry (2:1) differs from TfR:transferrin stoichiometry (2:2), implying a different mode of binding for HFE and transferrin to TfR, consistent with our demonstration that HFE, transferrin, and TfR form a ternary complex.


Nature | 2000

Crystal structure of the hereditary haemochromatosis protein HFE complexed with transferrin receptor.

Melanie J. Bennett; José A. Lebrón; Pamela J. Bjorkman

HFE is related to major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I proteins and is mutated in the iron-overload disease hereditary haemochromatosis. HFE binds to the transferrin receptor (TfR), a receptor by which cells acquire iron-loaded transferrin. The 2.8 Å crystal structure of a complex between the extracellular portions of HFE and TfR shows two HFE molecules which grasp each side of a twofold symmetric TfR dimer. On a cell membrane containing both proteins, HFE would ‘lie down’ parallel to the membrane, such that the HFE helices that delineate the counterpart of the MHC peptide-binding groove make extensive contacts with helices in the TfR dimerization domain. The structures of TfR alone and complexed with HFE differ in their domain arrangement and dimer interfaces, providing a mechanism for communicating binding events between TfR chains. The HFE–TfR complex suggests a binding site for transferrin on TfR and sheds light upon the function of HFE in regulating iron homeostasis.


Advances in Protein Chemistry | 1997

OLIGOMER FORMATION BY 3D DOMAIN SWAPPING : A MODEL FOR PROTEIN ASSEMBLY AND MISASSEMBLY

Michael P. Schlunegger; Melanie J. Bennett; David Eisenberg

Publisher Summary This chapter examines one type of interchain, noncovalent protein-protein bond: 3D domain swapping. To date, 3D domain swapping has been definitively established only in closed oligomers and seen in crystallographic detail only in dimeric proteins. The extent and significance of 3D domain swapping in functional and malfunctional protein assemblies are explored. The tendency of a protein to undergo 3D domain swapping is governed by structural, thermodynamic, and kinetic factors. Structural factors are considered in the following section; thermodynamic and kinetic factors are discussed here, which has specific features for diphtheria toxin but also general features that apply to all 3D domain swapped proteins. The thermodynamic and kinetic factors that govern 3D domain swapping are influenced by the amino acid sequence and three-dimensional structure of the protein, which in turn are affected by mutations. The most critical factor is that the protein contains a segment of polypeptide chain that can act as a hinge loop. The role of amino acid sequence and three-dimensional structure in 3D domain swapping is discussed. The chapter closes with a brief consideration of the possibility that 3D domain swapping is a mechanism for the formation of amyloid or other pathological aggregates of proteins.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2005

Crystal structure of prostate-specific membrane antigen, a tumor marker and peptidase

Mindy I. Davis; Melanie J. Bennett; Leonard M. Thomas; Pamela J. Bjorkman

Prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) is highly expressed in prostate cancer cells and nonprostatic solid tumor neovasculature and is a target for anticancer imaging and therapeutic agents. PSMA acts as a glutamate carboxypeptidase (GCPII) on small molecule substrates, including folate, the anticancer drug methotrexate, and the neuropeptide N-acetyl-l-aspartyl-l-glutamate. Here we present the 3.5-Å crystal structure of the PSMA ectodomain, which reveals a homodimer with structural similarity to transferrin receptor, a receptor for iron-loaded transferrin that lacks protease activity. Unlike transferrin receptor, the protease domain of PSMA contains a binuclear zinc site, catalytic residues, and a proposed substrate-binding arginine patch. Elucidation of the PSMA structure combined with docking studies and a proposed catalytic mechanism provides insight into the recognition of inhibitors and the natural substrate N-acetyl-l-aspartyl-l-glutamate. The PSMA structure will facilitate development of chemotherapeutics, cancer-imaging agents, and agents for treatment of neurological disorders.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

A linear lattice model for polyglutamine in CAG-expansion diseases

Melanie J. Bennett; Kathryn E. Huey-Tubman; Andrew B. Herr; Anthony P. West; Scott A. Ross; Pamela J. Bjorkman

Huntingtons disease and several other neurological diseases are caused by expanded polyglutamine [poly(Gln)] tracts in different proteins. Mechanisms for expanded (>36 Gln residues) poly(Gln) toxicity include the formation of aggregates that recruit and sequester essential cellular proteins [Preisinger, E., Jordan, B. M., Kazantsev, A. & Housman, D. (1999) Phil. Trans. R. Soc. London B 354, 1029–1034; Chen, S., Berthelier, V., Yang, W. & Wetzel, R. (2001) J. Mol. Biol. 311, 173–182] and functional alterations, such as improper interactions with other proteins [Cummings, C. J. & Zoghbi, H. Y. (2000) Hum. Mol. Genet. 9, 909–916]. Expansion above the “pathologic threshold” (≈36 Gln) has been proposed to induce a conformational transition in poly(Gln) tracts, which has been suggested as a target for therapeutic intervention. Here we show that structural analyses of soluble huntingtin exon 1 fusion proteins with 16 to 46 glutamine residues reveal extended structures with random coil characteristics and no evidence for a global conformational change above 36 glutamines. An antibody (MW1) Fab fragment, which recognizes full-length huntingtin in mouse brain sections, binds specifically to exon 1 constructs containing normal and expanded poly(Gln) tracts, with affinity and stoichiometry that increase with poly(Gln) length. These data support a “linear lattice” model for poly(Gln), in which expanded poly(Gln) tracts have an increased number of ligand-binding sites as compared with normal poly(Gln). The linear lattice model provides a rationale for pathogenicity of expanded poly(Gln) tracts and a structural framework for drug design.


Structure | 1997

Steroid recognition and regulation of hormone action: crystal structure of testosterone and NADP+ bound to 3α-hydroxysteroid/dihydrodiol dehydrogenase

Melanie J. Bennett; Ross H. Albert; Joseph M. Jez; Haiching Ma; Trevor M. Penning; Mitchell Lewis

BACKGROUND Mammalian 3 alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases (3 alpha-HSDs) modulate the activities of steroid hormones by reversibly reducing their C3 ketone groups. In steroid target tissues, 3 alpha-HSDs act on 5 alpha-dihydrotestosterone, a potent male sex hormone (androgen) implicated in benign prostate hyperplasia and prostate cancer. Rat liver 3 alpha-HSD belongs to the aldo-keto reductase (AKR) superfamily and provides a model for mammalian 3 alpha-, 17 beta- and 20 alpha-HSDs, which share > 65% sequence identity. The determination of the structure of 3 alpha-HSD in complex with NADP+ and testosterone (a competitive inhibitor) will help to further our understanding of steroid recognition and hormone regulation by mammalian HSDs. RESULTS We have determined the 2.5 A resolution crystal structure of recombinant rat liver 3 alpha-HSD complexed with NADP+ and testosterone. The structure provides the first picture of an HSD ternary complex in the AKR superfamily, and is the only structure to date of testosterone bound to a protein. It reveals that the C3 ketone in testosterone, corresponding to the reactive group in a substrate, is poised above the nicotinamide ring which is involved in hydride transfer. In addition, the C3 ketone forms hydrogen bonds with two active-site residues implicated in catalysis (Tyr55 and His117). CONCLUSIONS The active-site arrangement observed in the 3 alpha-HSD ternary complex structure suggests that each positional-specific and stereospecific reaction catalyzed by an HSD requires a particular substrate orientation, the general features of which can be predicted. 3 alpha-HSDs are likely to bind substrates in a similar manner to the way in which testosterone is bound in the ternary complex, that is with the A ring of the steroid substrate in the active site and the beta face towards the nicotinamide ring to facilitate hydride transfer. In contrast, we predict that 17 beta-HSDs will bind substrates with the D ring of the steroid in the active site and with the alpha face towards the nicotinamide ring. The ability to bind substrates in only one or a few orientations could determine the positional-specificity and stereospecificity of each HSD. Residues lining the steroid-binding cavities are highly variable and may select these different orientations.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2007

The structure of a polyQ–anti-polyQ complex reveals binding according to a linear lattice model

Pingwei Li; Kathryn E. Huey-Tubman; Tiyu Gao; Xiaojun Li; Anthony P. West; Melanie J. Bennett; Pamela J. Bjorkman

Huntington and related neurological diseases result from expansion of a polyglutamine (polyQ) tract. The linear lattice model for the structure and binding properties of polyQ proposes that both expanded and normal polyQ tracts in the preaggregation state are random-coil structures but that an expanded polyQ repeat contains a larger number of epitopes recognized by antibodies or other proteins. The crystal structure of polyQ bound to MW1, an antibody against polyQ, reveals that polyQ adopts an extended, coil-like structure. Consistent with the linear lattice model, multimeric MW1 Fvs bind more tightly to longer than to shorter polyQ tracts and, compared with monomeric Fv, bind expanded polyQ repeats with higher apparent affinities. These results suggest a mechanism for the toxicity of expanded polyQ and a strategy to link anti-polyQ compounds to create high-avidity therapeutics.


Steroids | 1997

Structure and function of 3α-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase

Trevor M. Penning; Melanie J. Bennett; Susan Smith-Hoog; Brian P. Schlegel; Joseph M. Jez; Mitchell Lewis

Mammalian 3 alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases (3 alpha-HSDs) inactivate circulating steroid hormones, and in target tissues regulate the occupancy of steroid hormone receptors. Molecular cloning indicates that 3 alpha-HSDs are members of the aldo-keto reductase (AKR) superfamily and display high sequence identity (> 60%). Of these, the most extensively characterized is rat liver 3 alpha-HSD. X-ray crystal structures of the apoenzyme and the E.NADP+ complex have been determined and serve as structural templates for other 3 alpha-HSDs. These structures reveal that rat liver 3 alpha-HSD adopts an (alpha/beta)8-barrel protein fold. NAD(P)(H) lies perpendicular to the barrel axis in an extended conformation, with the nicotinamide ring at the core of the barrel, and the adenine ring at the periphery of the structure. The nicotinamide ring is stabilized by interaction with Y216, S166, D167, and Q190, so that the A-face points into the vacant active site. The 4-pro-(R) hydrogen transferred in the oxidoreduction of steroids is in close proximity to a catalytic tetrad that consists of D50, Y55, K84, and H117. A water molecule is within hydrogen bond distance of H117 and Y55, and its position may mimic the position of the carbonyl of a 3-ketosteroid substrate. The catalytic tetrad is conserved in members of the AKR superfamily and resides at the base of an apolar cleft implicated in binding steroid hormone. The apolar cleft consists of a side of apolar residues (L54, W86, F128, and F129), and opposing this side is a flexible loop that contains W227. These constraints suggest that the alpha-face of the steroid would orient itself along that side of the cleft containing W86. Site-directed mutagenesis of the catalytic tetrad indicates that Y55 and K84 are essential for catalysis. Y55S and Y55F mutants are catalytically inactive, but still form binary (E.NADPH) and ternary (E.NADH.Testosterone) complexes; by contrast K84R and K84M mutants are catalytically inactive, but do not bind steroid hormone. The reliance on a Tyr/Lys pair is reminiscent of catalytic mechanisms proposed for other AKR members as well as for HSDs that belong to the short-chain dehydrogenase/reductase (SDR) family, in which Tyr is the general acid, with its pKa being lowered by Lys. Superimposition of the nicotinamide rings in the structures of 3 alpha-HSD (an AKR) and 3 alpha, 20 beta-HSD (an SDR) show that the Tyr/Lys pairs are positionally conserved, suggesting convergent evolution across protein families to a common mechanism for HSD catalysis. W86Y and W227Y mutants bind testosterone to the E.NADH complex, with effective increases in Kd of 8- and 20-fold. These data provide the first evidence that the side of the apolar cleft containing W86 and the opposing flexible loop containing W227 are parts of the steroid-binding site. Detailed mutagenesis studies of the apolar cleft and elucidation of a ternary complex structure will ultimately provide details of the determinants that govern steroid hormone recognition. These determinants could provide a rational basis for structure-based inhibitor design.


Steroids | 1996

Mammalian 3α-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases

Trevor M. Penning; John E. Pawlowski; Brian P. Schlegel; Joseph M. Jez; Hseuh Kung Lin; Susan S. Hoog; Melanie J. Bennett; Mitchell Lewis

Abstract Mammalian 3α-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases (3α-HSDs) regulate steroid hormone levels. For example, hepatic 3α-HSDs inactivate circulating androgens, progestins, and glucocorticoids. In target tissues they regulate access of steroid hormones to steroid hormone receptors. For example, in the prostate 3α-HSD acts as a molecular switch and controls the amount of 5α-dihydrotestosterone that can bind to the androgen receptor, while in the brain 3α-HSD can regulate the amount of tetrahydrosteroids that can alter GABA a receptor function. Molecular cloning indicates that these mammalian 3α-HSDs belong to the aldo-keto reductase superfamily and that they are highly homologous proteins. Using the three-dimensional structure of rat liver 3α-HSD as a template for site-directed mutagenesis, details regarding structure-function relationships, including catalysis and cofactor and steroid hormone recognition have been elucidated. These details may be relevant to all mammalian 3α-HSDs.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1991

Crystallization of diphtheria toxin

Gary Fujii; Seunghyon Choe; Melanie J. Bennett; David Eisenberg

Two new crystal forms (forms III and IV) have been grown of diphtheria toxin (DT), which kills susceptible cells by catalyzing the ADP-ribosylation of elongation factor 2, thereby stopping protein synthesis. Forms III and IV diffract to 2.3 A and 2.7 A resolution, respectively. Both forms belong to space group C2; the unit cell parameters for form III are a = 107.3 A, b = 91.7 A, c = 66.3 A and beta = 94.7 degrees and those for form IV are a = 108.3 A, b = 92.3 A, c = 66.1 A and beta = 90.4 degrees. Both forms have one protein chain per asymmetric unit with the dimeric molecule on a twofold axis of symmetry. Form IV is exceptional among all crystal forms of DT in that it can be grown reproducibly. Thus the form IV crystals should yield a crystallographic structure giving insight into the catalytic, receptor-binding and membrane-insertion properties of DT.

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Pamela J. Bjorkman

California Institute of Technology

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Joseph M. Jez

Washington University in St. Louis

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Mitchell Lewis

University of Pennsylvania

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Trevor M. Penning

University of Pennsylvania

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Brian P. Schlegel

University of Pennsylvania

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José A. Lebrón

California Institute of Technology

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Anthony P. West

California Institute of Technology

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